7 Plots that the Mad Men Season Finale Episode Description Could Refer To
Six little words are all AMC will offer Mad Men fans about Sunday's season finale: "Opportunity arises for Don and Peggy." Well, then. Considering the dark depths the series has fallen to during season four, an opportunity of any kind sounds like a good thing, but what will it be? Ahead, Movieline offers up the 7 most likely plots this mysterious episode description could be referring to. Warning: Any actually spoilers are pure coincidence. (Apologies in advance, Matthew Weiner!)
1.) Don actually gets a call from Robert F. Kennedy, who wants Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce to spearhead his campaign for president in 1968, but only if he has a woman copywriter on his staff. Enter Peggy. This will eventually end in tragedy, but for now, hooray!
2.) Ted Chaough decides he wants to expand his creative department at Cutler Gleason and Chaough and offers to make Don and Peggy his partners in crime. Don refuses and punches him in the face, while Peggy smirks in the background.
3.) A future version of Don arrives in a time machine from 1985 and warns present-day Don about sleeping with secretaries and bell-bottom jeans. The future Don also lets slip who wins the first-ever Super Bowl in 1966. Don tells Peggy and the two immediately place an enormous wager, saving the company.
4.) Don and Peggy are given the chance to open that McDonald's franchise they've always wanted.
5.) With Bert Cooper on the outs, Roger takes up residence as the office vagabond. This allows Don to move into Roger's office, meaning Peggy gets Don's office. Confused? Hey, technically it would be an opportunity for both of them. Er, all of them.
6.) Pete asks Don and Peggy to be the godparents for his daughter.
7.) Don and Peggy get caught in an elevator during the 1965 New York City blackout. After an evening of soul-searching, the pair consummate their relationship in all its fanfic glory.

Comments
But . . . but . . . Bert Cooper doesn't have an office!
It's related to Disney who presented at the 65 World Fair. This was foreshadowed by the rat running around the office.
Roger Sterling jumps out the window? You know it's coming.
Don's daughter commits suicide.
you mean the mouse.
Hey, you forgot, "Don calls Emerson Foote back and takes on an account with the American Cancer Society."
check out the facebook page for the real dude- http://www.facebook.com/EmersonFoote
Roger's a coward. He'd never have the balls to jump.
I love the 7th 🙂